Is Your Firm Paying Too Much For Your 401(k)?

If you are a small business owner who offers a
401(k) plan, you’re already ahead of the curve. Only 53% of small- to mid-sized
businesses offer retirement plans, and the numbers skew higher the larger the
business gets.[1]

However, don’t get too complacent yet. It’s not enough to simply offer a 401(k) plan. Not all retirement plans are created equal, and some can actually hurt workers instead of helping them. So, how do you know if your retirement plan is a valuable benefit or if you may be inadvertently damaging your employees’ savings?

Read Your Annual 401(k) Fee
Disclosures

Retirement plan providers are legally required
to provide both you and each of your employees with an annual fee disclosure (408b-2 to the business and 404a-5 to the employee). The problem is that you have to read the fee disclosure for it to be of any use to you. A recent survey conducted by the Pew Charitable Trusts found that 44% of employers had not read their fee disclosure in the past year.[2]If you don’t read your fee disclosure, how are
you going to know what you are paying? How are you going to know if you’re
paying what you should be? Granted, the fee disclosures can be confusing. In
fact, 7% of those surveyed had read their disclosure but simply didn’t
understand it.

As a business owner, you have a lot on your plate, and it’s easy to let something like fee disclosures fall to the bottom of your priority list. But, that’s dangerous. It is important for you to understand your retirement plan fee
disclosure to ensure that your plan is working in your own and your employees’
best interests.

Why Reading 401(k) Fee
Disclosures Matters

The two main reasons that reading fee
disclosures matters are that 1) as an owner, you have a fiduciary obligation to
monitor the fees and the quality of your plan, and 2) not being aware of fees
can cost both you, the owner, and your employees a lot of money in retirement.

401(k) Fiduciary ObligationIf you sponsor a retirement plan, you are by
law a fiduciary. This means you are legally obligated to act in the best
interest of the retirement plan participants. Failure to do so can result in
personal liability.There are several primary fiduciary responsibilities that come with offering a retirement plan, and one of them is to regularly monitor the plan and ensure you are paying only reasonable and necessary fees.

It isn’t enough to analyze the fees when you
first hire a service provider. Retirement plan fees change regularly, and what
was reasonable five years ago may not be reasonable today. The government
requires service providers to disclose their fees on an annual basis because
they understand the changing nature of fees. As a business owner, you need to
make sure to both read and understand those disclosures and act on your
findings if necessary.

Excessive 401(k) Fee ConsequencesSo, why do fees matter so much? Every dollar
adds up over a lifetime and can make a big difference in retirement. For a
worker making about $30,000 a year and saving 5% of his or her income each
year, public policy think tank Demos found that he would pay a total of
$154,794 in 401(k) fees over his lifetime. That’s over 5 years of his life
spent working just to pay 401(k) fees. For a high-income worker making $90,000
a year, around $277,000 will go towards paying fees.[3]

It isn’t enough to analyze the fees when you
first hire a service provider. Retirement plan fees change regularly, and what
was reasonable five years ago may not be reasonable today. The government
requires service providers to disclose their fees on an annual basis because
they understand the changing nature of fees. As a business owner, you need to
make sure to both read and understand those disclosures and act on your
findings if necessary.

Perform A 401(k) Plan Benchmark

You don’t want to waste your money on
excessive 401(k) fees and you don’t want to breach your fiduciary duty. What
can you do about it?

Evaluating your 401(k) does not need to be
difficult.It only takes two steps:

• Collect the “408(b)(2)” disclosure from your 401(k) plan service provider• Benchmark the service provider’s fees for reasonableness

Benchmarking is done by comparing your service provider’s fees to competitors to demonstrate they are appropriate. Simply calculate the "all-in" fee (service provider fees + investment expenses) for your plan and compare this fee to the "all-in" fee of 3 or more competing 401(k) providers (other providers will be glad to send you a fee proposal for your plan).

Once you compare the fees charged by each
provider and adjust for any difference in service and experience, you can show
that you have met your fiduciary duty.Should your current fees prove to be excessive, you now have three new plan provider options to switch to.

If you’d like assistance in 401(k) plan benchmarking, we offer a benchmarking report that will show you how your plan compares against others. Call us today at (844) 377-4963 or email windgate@windgatewealth.com for a complimentary consultation and customized recommendations to lower your plan fees. You can also book an appointment online here.

About Sean

Sean Condon is a wealth advisor with more than a decade of industry experience. He specializes in helping entrepreneurs build a culture of financial confidence by offering their employees unprecedented access to a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional. Taking an owner’s approach, Sean does his best to understand the many elements of clients’ entrepreneurial journeys. He works in a technically competent and caring manner to reduce clients’ anxiety about money issues and serves as a fiduciary by always putting his clients’ best interests first. Learn more about Sean by connecting with him on LinkedIn.

[3] Source: The Retirement Savings Drain: The Hidden and Excessive Costs of 401(k)’s

Windgate does not provide tax advice. Consult your professional tax advisor for questions concerning your personal tax or financial situation.Information here is obtained from what are considered reliable sources; however, its accuracy, completeness, or reliability cannot be guaranteed. All investments carry some level of risk including the loss of principal invested.